Blog Post 1
Hello, I’m Nicole Carver. I don’t write a lot, but when I
do… I write to remember. I write to tell loved ones how I feel. I write to
celebrate. I write to say thank you. I write to fill the blank spaces. I write
to learn and to study. I write to bring joy. I write because writing is a
challenge for me. I write to improve. I write to tell people about what I love.
I am the kind of writer who struggles with writing. My brain likes math problems
and science equations. It is not very fond of rhetorical analysis and
punctuation. Even though I’m not fond of writing, I am the kind of person that will
try hard to improve my writing as the semester goes along.
As for
the community portion of the class, the Harris essay really hit it on the head.
He was saying that a community has numerous meanings and types. He focused a
lot on the academic community with the universities. Harris was saying that the
point of having so many different communities is so that students can be a part
of the different communities even if they contradict each other. Communities
are not meant to be apart for a little bit of time and then move on to another
one. They are meant to be taken through life with you. I am apart of multiple
communities. From when I was little until now I have developed a lot of the
communities that I am still apart of today. I moved to Nebraska in eighth
grade, so I still identify myself with the community that I grew up with. I
also identify with the community of friends that I built in college. These
girls that I have found here are going to be a community that will be with me
forever. To be in a community is to be a part of a group of people that you
grow up with, have something in common with, identify with, and you enjoy being
around. The communities come from multiple parts of my life. Classes, friends,
neighborhoods, family and church are where I have found most of the communities
that I identify with now. They feel like communities because I feel comfortable
and safe in them. Language and writing are a big part and different for the
communities. As you talk to different groups of people, the way you talk
changes. When Harris talks about Sylvia and Richard, it’s exactly what I’m
talking about. He says Sylvia has three languages, even though they were not actual languages, she still talked about how she needs to learn the public
language.
These
are my views about both aspects of this class; the writing part, the community
part, and them together. I am glad to expand on these subjects as the year goes
on. I’m also excited to improve my writing skills on my own and with the class
as a community.
Nicole, I understand the disconnect you see between equations and science and writing, but I want to push on that a little. Rhetorical analysis (and in this course, discourse analysis) is really very similar to what you do int he sciences. Analysis is all about figuring out how something works and why it works that way and what effect it has. That's exactly what scientists and mathematicians do all the time. ...we just use a lot more words to explain it than they do. ;-)
ReplyDeleteYou say that communities are groups that "you grow up with, have something in common with, identify with, and you enjoy being around." Based on your experience, do all communities have to fit all of these requirements? What would Harris say? Do we enjoy being around all the communities we are a part of, for example?
I, too, found Harris' example of Sylvia and her three "languages" interesting, but I'm wondering how you see it connecting to the point you make before that about y our experiences. I'm not sure I see your experience connecting with Harris' example. What different languages, specifically, do you see yourself speaking or writing in in different communities?